Savor Makes Online Shopping Even Easier With Their New Coupon Platform

February 12, 2014

7:29 pm

Share

Online shoppers rejoice, because Savor.co today announced the launch of their free iPad app that provides access to personalized coupons on various merchandise at all the big name stores like Best Buy, Nordstrom, and Starbucks. In addition to the iPad app release, Savor also rolled out a new version of their web based platform.

The biggest feature that Savor’s dual-release focuses on is the omni-chanel shopping trend. By supporting this trend, users can seamlessly transition between deal browsing and selection across desktops, smartphones, or tablets.

“In 2014, over 50 million consumers will use mobile coupons and it’s clear that the omni-channel consumer is the new reality,” says Rich DeNardis, founder of Savor. “Over half of shoppers who start shopping on a tablet finish the purchase on their computer.”

Aside from their omni-channel support, the Savor app was designed to emulate the traditional model of coupon-shopping by hunting the web for the best offers at popular retailers. Everything it turns up, based on users’ social DNA, is organized into a digital catalog for easy browsing.

Once users find the deals they want, all they have to do is tap on the coupon to be directed to the retailer’s online store. From that point, it’s as easy as copying and pasting the coupon code and proceeding to checkout.

The team at Savor built the platform to cater for a new generation of shoppers they were seeing; individuals who want curated content in a visual and easy-to-browse layout. So the Savor team combined search technology with a simplified shopping experience to give their users what they want, when they want it, and all for free.

Elon Musk's tweets will soon all be lawyer-approved: According to a new court filing, the millionaire CEO has reached an agreement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to have a Tesla lawyer vet all of his Twitter musings on the subjects of Tesla’s finances.

Google and Apple have dropped the Chinese social video app TikTok from their app stores in the country of India, following a ban enacted by an Indian state court.The app, which lets users share quick videos soundtracked to music, has 500 million users, and 40% live in India.

With bad headline after bad headline, it hasn't been a great week for social media companies. From Facebook discriminatory ads, to Neo-Nazis on YouTube, we round up all this awful week for social media companies. We round up some of the bad press from the past five days

Will is a Senior Writer with Tech.Co, based out of America's Finest City: San Diego. He covers all territory West of the Mississippi river, digging deep for awesome local entrepreneurs, companies, and ideas. He's the resident Android junkie and will be happy to tell you why you should switch to the OS. When he's off the clock, Will focuses his literary talent on the art of creative writing...or you might find him surfing in Ocean Beach.
Follow Will on Twitter @WJS1988